An Analysis of Romania’s Energy Strategy: Perspectives and Developments since 2020
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- what impact the pandemic and regional conflict had on climate and energy policies in the EU;
- what impact the pandemic and regional conflict had on climate and energy policies in Romania as an EU Eastern European country;
- what was the Romanian energy strategy before this and how did it change after the conflict started;
- what is the current state in the EU and Romania regarding energy production and energy consumption;
- what is the potential that Romania has for greener energy;
- how much does the buildings sector, being the largest energy consumer in the EU and Romania, impact the energy policies, and what is its current state regarding both energy production for buildings and energy consumption for buildings.
2. Methods and Procedures
3. Regional Conflict and Pandemic Impact on Climate Strategy and Energy Policy
3.1. Impact in the European Union
- reducing GHG emissions by 40% until 2030 compared with 1990 levels.;
- increasing the energy consumption from renewable energy sources up to 32% until 2030;
- improving the energy efficiency of the EU’s final energy consumption by 32.5% until 2030.
- reduce GHG emissions by 55% until 2030 compared with 1990 levels;
- increase the energy consumption from renewable energy sources up to 45% until 2030;
- improve the energy efficiency of the EU’s final energy consumption by 42.5% until 2030.
- to save energy;
- to produce clean energy from renewable sources;
- to diversify the energy supplies.
- the carbon tax;
- the EU ETS (Emission Trading System).
3.2. Impact in Romania as a European Union Member
- reduce the emissions from ETS sectors up to 43.9% compared with 2005 levels and 2% from non-ETS sectors compared with 2005 levels;
- increase to 30.7% the energy from renewable sources from the final energy consumption;
- reduce the final energy consumption by 40.4% compared with the 2007 projection.
4. Energy in the European Union and Romania
- Energy production (or primary energy consumption), which is energy obtained from another source, in a form that can be used for human needs;
- Energy consumption (or final energy consumption), which is energy in a specific form, used by humans for specific purposes.
4.1. Energy in the European Union
4.2. Energy in Romania
4.3. Romania’s Potential for Greener Electricity Production
5. Buildings Sector
5.1. Buildings in the European Union
- all new buildings must be zero-emission buildings from 2028;
- all new public buildings must be zero-emission buildings from 2026;
- all new buildings need to have solar technology from 2028;
- all residential buildings that need renovation need to have solar technology from 2032;
- residential buildings need to reach class E by 2030 and class D by 2033;
- non-residential and public buildings need to achieve class E by 2027 and class D by 2030;
- fossil fuel in new heating systems will be totally eliminated by 2035.
5.2. Buildings in Romania
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions and Policy Implications
- reduce the GHG emissions by 55% until 2030, 95% until 2040, and 100% by 2050;
- reduce the emissions from ETS sectors up to 43.9% and 2% from non ETS sectors;
- increase the primary energy consumption from renewables up to 45% until 2030;
- improve the energy efficiency for the EU’s final energy consumption by 42.5% until 2030;
- increase to 30.7% the energy from renewable sources from the final energy consumption;
- reduce the final energy consumption by 40.4% compared with the 2007 projection;
- all new buildings must be zero-emission buildings from 2026 and 2028 onwards;
- all new buildings need to have solar technology from 2028;
- all residential buildings that need renovation need to have solar technology from 2032;
- residential buildings need to reach class E by 2030 and class D by 2033;
- non-residential and public buildings need to achieve class E by 2027 and class D by 2030;
- fossil fuel in new heating systems will be totally eliminated by 2035;
- revise the Romanian Energy Strategy in 2022 with the regional power provider in mind;
- start the Recovery and Resilience plan, funded by the EU, to help with post-pandemic and regional conflict effects on energy.
- EU saved 20% of energy consumption in 2022;
- Russian gas imports in EU dropped to 8% in September 2022 compared to August 2021;
- EU photovoltaics capacity increased to 47% in 2022 compared to 2021;
- electricity generated from renewables in EU increased to 22%, overtaking natural gas for the first time by 2.5%;
- it is estimated that fossil fuel usage in EU will register a 20% drop in 2023 compared to 2022;
- energy imports from Russia decreased with 90% in March 2023 compared with the monthly figures from 2019 to 2022 in the EU;
- energy imports from Russia decreased from 53.50% in 2021 to 20.90% in 2022 in Romania;
- Romania ended the import trend and exported electrical energy since July 2022 each consecutive month, with efforts to become a regional provider.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Objective |
---|---|
1 | Ensuring access to electricity and heat for all consumers |
2 | Clean energy and energy efficiency |
3 | Modernization of the corporate governance system and the institutional regulatory capacity |
4 | Protecting the vulnerable consumer and reducing energy poverty |
5 | Competitive energy markets, the basis of a competitive economy |
6 | Increasing the quality of energy education and the continuous training of qualified human resources |
7 | Romania, regional energy security provider |
8 | Increasing Romania’s energy contribution on regional and European markets by capitalizing on national primary energy resources |
2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Crude oil | 146.18 | 137.63 | 116.98 | 113.34 | 94.8 |
Natural gas | 102.61 | 93.51 | 90.3 | 96.18 | 39.85 |
Coal | 64.82 | 54.96 | 44.02 | 51.21 | 25.62 |
Liquified natural gas | 1.19 | 3.87 | 4.75 | 7.02 | 8.57 |
Petroleum oil from natural gas | 0.45 | 0.64 | 0.72 | 1.01 | 1.12 |
Coke | 0.56 | 0.67 | 0.55 | 0.82 | 0.37 |
Peat | 0.11 | 0.17 | 0.17 | 0.21 | 0.12 |
Lignite | 0.15 | 0.11 | 0.11 | 0.04 | 0 |
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Bulmez, A.-M.; Brezeanu, A.-I.; Dragomir, G.; Talabă, O.-M.; Năstase, G. An Analysis of Romania’s Energy Strategy: Perspectives and Developments since 2020. Climate 2024, 12, 101. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12070101
Bulmez A-M, Brezeanu A-I, Dragomir G, Talabă O-M, Năstase G. An Analysis of Romania’s Energy Strategy: Perspectives and Developments since 2020. Climate. 2024; 12(7):101. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12070101
Chicago/Turabian StyleBulmez, Alexandru-Mihai, Alin-Ionuț Brezeanu, George Dragomir, Ovidiu-Mircea Talabă, and Gabriel Năstase. 2024. "An Analysis of Romania’s Energy Strategy: Perspectives and Developments since 2020" Climate 12, no. 7: 101. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12070101
APA StyleBulmez, A. -M., Brezeanu, A. -I., Dragomir, G., Talabă, O. -M., & Năstase, G. (2024). An Analysis of Romania’s Energy Strategy: Perspectives and Developments since 2020. Climate, 12(7), 101. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12070101